3D enhancement of a single SEM image. Example: structure on a ladybug. (SEM image: Chris Supranowitz, University of Rochester).

Gray level drift correction of a single BSE SEM image. Before correction there is variation in two homogeneous phases along the colored lines. Colorization highlights the variation. After drift correction each phase of the material is colored uniformly and a phase map is obtained. Metrics can be generated on surface composition, for example on the ratios between different phases. (SEM image courtesy of the School of Geosciences, University of Edinburgh.)

Fast, automated, traceable analysis report creation

Work in a smart user environment in your own language and generate multi-page analysis reports – comprehensive illustrated online help in 10 languages with examples.Trace analysis steps in the hierarchical analysis workflow and fine tune steps on the fly.Preview analysis document pages and navigate using the page viewer.Automatically analyze new image sets by applying existing documents as templates.Speed up analysis report creation using Minidocs – sequences of analysis steps saved as macros.Easy post-processing and publication using standard tools - Excel-compatible text export for all numerical data - high resolution image bitmap export up to 1200 dpi – Word-compatible and PDF document export.

Expandable & upgradeable

There is a wide range of optional modules for advanced and specialized applications. For example the Grains & Particles module includes multiple complementary methods for analyzing grains, particles, islands and surface morphology. The 4D Analysis module which can be used to denoise a series of SEM images using Principal Component Analysis.